I didn't get mine. Dang. Curious about my rundown though I unfortunately only started logging halfway through the year and I only log new watches. Trying to log everything I've seen seems a daunting task.

Breaking down my stats:
The 395 films includes lots of two-reelers and 5-minute cartoons, so it's not as impressive as it might initially seem.
I watched 11 Laurel & Hardy shorts last month which is how Stanley got the top spot.
And I got a Hitchcock box set for my birthday so that explains that.

Captain Terror wrote:
Breaking down my stats:
The 395 films includes lots of two-reelers and 5-minute cartoons, so it's not as impressive as it might initially seem.
I watched 11 Laurel & Hardy shorts last month which is how Stanley got the top spot.
And I got a Hitchcock box set for my birthday so that explains that.

My yearly rushes said I logged 148 films. Alec Baldwin was my most watched actor (for Mission Impossible, his cameos in A Star is Born and BlacKkKlansman, and a joke post I made about The Boss Baby being an Oscar nominee), and Kurosawa is my most watched director.

Captain Terror wrote:
They're so deeply rooted in my childhood that it's hard for me to predict what a first-time viewer will think of them in 2019.
Which one was it?

I don't know what it was called. The one where they have to clean up after a party before Hardy's wife gets home. I basically only watched it after John C. Reilly on Colbert recommended those unfamiliar with them check out this particular short. I thought to myself "who hasn't seen a Laurel and Hardy before".Then quickly realized after checking my memory bank, that I hadn't. I had just been assuming all of these years because they are such ubiquitous in pop culture.

I liked it a good deal and have every intention of checking out more. I generally like these sorts of old comedy teams, so I'm generally a receptive audience.

crumbsroom wrote:
I don't know what it was called. The one where they have to clean up after a party before Hardy's wife gets home. I basically only watched it after John C. Reilly on Colbert recommended those unfamiliar with them check out this particular short. I thought to myself "who hasn't seen a Laurel and Hardy before".Then quickly realized after checking my memory bank, that I hadn't. I had just been assuming all of these years because they are such ubiquitous in pop culture.

I liked it a good deal and have every intention of checking out more. I generally like these sorts of old comedy teams, so I'm generally a receptive audience.

Sounds like Helpmates,

where cleaning the house results in no house?

That's a good one to start with. I hope the Stan & Ollie film inspires people to check them out. I'd especially like to see their 20s films get a nice Blu Ray release.